Business Day (Nigeria)

Virus will push up to 60m into extreme poverty, World Bank warns

President David Malpass calls for more help to alleviate impact on ‘millions of livelihood­s’

- JONATHAN WHEATLEY

Up to 60m people will be pushed into extreme poverty by the economic consequenc­es of the coronaviru­s crisis, and current recovery efforts are not enough, David Malpass, president of the World Bank, has warned.

The Bank expects world economic output to contract by as much as 5 per cent in 2020, erasing efforts over the past three years to alleviate poverty in the world’s poorest countries, Mr Malpass said on Tuesday.

“Millions of livelihood­s have been destroyed and healthcare systems are under strain worldwide,” he said.

The World Bank defines “extreme poverty” as living on less than $1.90 per person per day.

The World Bank Group is offering $160bn in grants and low interest loans to help poor countries tackle the crisis over a 15-month period. Mr Malpass said that 100 countries, home to 70 per cent of the world’s population, had already been granted emergency finance.

However, he said: “While the World Bank is providing sizeable resources, it won’t be enough.”

Interactio­n with advanced economies will be the single biggest step to recovery for the developing world

David Malpass

Mr Malpass said he was frustrated by commercial lenders’ reluctance to participat­e in a debt service suspension initiative for 73 of the world’s poorest countries which was announced last month by the G20 group of leading developed and developing nations.

He said that 14 countries had so far submitted requests to official bilateral creditors for repayment standstill­s, a further 23 were preparing to do so and another 17 were “seriously considerin­g” it.

The initiative allows countries to request a standstill on repayments of country-tocountry loans owed to G20 members until the end of this year, while preserving the value of the loans for later repayment. The G20 has called on banks and bondholder­s to participat­e on comparable terms.

Many bondholder­s, and some debtor countries, have resisted, saying that borrowers risk being cut off from internatio­nal capital markets in future.

Mr Malpass said some countries had overestima­ted the market access risks.

“These are the poorest countries in the world and while their hope may be that commercial credit markets will reopen suddenly in 2020, the likelihood is that the pandemic and the economic shutdown in advanced economies wi l l have long- lasting effects,” he said.

Instead, poor countries should concentrat­e on implementi­ng economic programmes that would attract remittance­s and direct investment from abroad, while encouragin­g investment by domestic businesses, he added.

He also stressed the importance of reopening advanced economies as they begin to come out of lockdown, allowing a resumption of financial flows to poor countries in the form of remittance­s, trade and tourism.

“Those have been critical losses and will be critical parts of the reopening,” he said. “Interactio­n with advanced economies will be the single biggest step to recovery for the developing world.”

 ?? © AFP via Getty Images ?? David Malpass, president of the World Bank
© AFP via Getty Images David Malpass, president of the World Bank

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